Alphamstone church, Essex.
The church is unusual, reputedly built on a Bronze Age burial mound, with sarsens built in to the wall - but nowhere near as weird as some of the vicars and rectors throughout history.
A short thread.
My favourite has to be Nicholas le Grice, the Tudor vicar who recorded all his good works on the walls in graffiti.
'This chancel was repaired with new timber work by me Nicholas le Gryce, Parson, Anno 1578'
In case you missed it the first time...
Le Grice wasn't just known for his 'good' works.
In the 1570s he was repeatedly in trouble - and in court - for illegally enclosing the local common land for his own use and profit.
Not the smartest cookie either...
To save cash Nicholas insisted his new young housemaid share a bed with his teenage son.
Unsurprisingly the maid ended up with child.
So he fired her, and sent his son away.
He didn't record THAT on the walls...
Nicholas was not the only priest to make heir mark, and the walls of the church are covered in graffiti, from the medieval to the early modern, including some very fine compass drawn examples.
And there's magic on the walls...
Perhaps most unusual amongst all the graffiti is this rather degraded example of a 'Rotas square' - a quasi-magical Christian symbol that had its origins back in the Roman period. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sator_Squ…
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Salle church, Norfolk.
A church revered by many as one of the finest late medieval examples in England, and where even the mason's marks are things of beauty.
Salle church is also unusual in having surviving external graffiti.
'James A Dunnett & John Dunnett 1754'
Making their mark for all to see.
And definitely a hard one to beat for #FontsOnFriday
The massive medieval font and font cover from Salle in Norfolk. I think we can safely say that this one is still in situ...
Remember back when we were all allowed out, and could visit places?
Nope. Me neither...
So I thought we could all take a virtual trip to look at some medieval wonders.
But as I'm setting the bar low, and am biased, I thought we'd go to Kings Lynn.
A short thread.
For those of you who don't know, Kings Lynn is stuck out in the east of England, and has been a major port since at least the Middle Ages.
Today it's sandwiched between the Fens, the Wash, and Norfolk.
It gets a bit overlooked obviously...
But the port was always the key to the town, as it brought in fairly massive wealth.
Kings Lynn was the first UK town to join the powerful trading federation - the Hanseatic League.
Their C15th warehouses survive to this day.
A short #Thread about markings on historical buildings.
With Halloween fast approaching my inbox begins to fill up with people sending me pictures of strange markings - wanting to know whether they have found 'witch marks'. 1/11
Firstly, 'Witch marks' isn't a term we use these days. It was invented by a journalist only a few decades ago & is just plain wrong. The marks have nothing to do with witches - but were thought to deter evil, or just be plain 'lucky'. 2/11
The thing is, most of the images I get sent aren't apotropaic marks at all. Sometimes I get sent images such as this - which is in fact an 'Ordnance Survey Benchmark'. You can read about them here - ordnancesurvey.co.uk/benchmarks/ 3/11